Wednesday, 12 December 2018

Teaching our children the joy of owning less



It is difficult to teach our children the joys of owning less when they are surrounded by a world of people wanting more.


In an increasingly materialistic world, our children search for acceptance within their peer groups which inevitably comes at a cost. Marketing routinely and intentionally targets these young adult demographics, knowing that once they get the minds and buying power of the youth, they will continue to have it for many years to come.


When our children begin to mature and start making their own choices, they use their peer network to aid their decisions making rather than looking to their parents for the answers. This creates a formidable challenge for parents, getting the minimalistic message through to our children and their friends. The message of sustainable consumerism as opposed to the excessive norm.


 Many of our children’s significant decisions are still ahead of them. The message of simplicity and frugality helps equip them to make wise decisions when the time domes. By teaching them that debt is not the solution and that financial freedom comes firstly living with in their means, will put them in a great position for the future.


 Reaching our children before the turn to their peer groups for the answers is so critical as educating them before their spending habits are formed will aid in counteracting the peer affects.


 As parents that have gained the knowledge that a fulfilled life is not gained from consumerism. Consumerism gives you small hits of what feels like fulfilment but ultimately all it brings is decades of financial burden and empty promises of fulfilment. We as parents need to recognize an important opportunity to inspire our children to pursue lives of greater value over financially focused success.


 As parents we need to mentor our children not with lectures about what they need to do. We need to demonstrate it with our own action by living our values every day.


Consider embracing these important tips for raising consumer conscious children in an age of excess:


 1. Simplicity. Our children are more likely to follow a simplicity model if they see it from their parents. The first (and most important) step in raising minimalist children is to let them experience the joys and benefits of intentionally living with less.


 
2. Idealism. Many teenagers embrace idealism and desire to find a cause that can change the world. Teach them its ok to be different and to pursue their own life.


3. Watch less television. It’s not as hard as you think—and has immediate, positive results for you and your child. Reading together as a family is good for adults and children and it will install some old world charm to family life


4. Make teenagers pay for expensive items themselves. Every parent ought to provide food, clothing, shelter, and necessities. And every parent should give good gifts to their kids. But by teaching them to save for those big ticket items with money raised from working or gifts will create real value explain to them how many hours they worked for that money and even better tell them how many hours you work for that money


5. Teach our children to recognize the underlying message in advertising. Advertisements are not going away and can never be completely avoided. Teach them to think what they are really selling and teach them how to consider purchasing and how it improves their lives as opposed to buying just because it is the norm.


6. Teach our children that life is not easy. Often, as parents we work hard to ensure a significant advantage for our children by providing for them at all costs. But we need to teach them that life is hard work and the more you have the more you work to pay for it. We need to teach them the truths of responsibility, it is hard work maintaining the possessions of life (lawns must be mowed, cars cleaned & maintained, laundry sorted, rooms tidied). Expose our children to this truth as early (and as often) as possible.


 
We only have a finite amount of time to sell, discover the joys of life with less and have more time to enjoy life.